Jonas spent three days in a whale stomach, right?
encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761565254_2/whale.html
I bet he would be dead by day two at the latest if he was REALLY in a whale stomach.
Actually, the original Hebrew refers only to a
Ha-dag gadol, âthe great fishâ. The Greek meanwhile renders
dag gadol as
kÄtei megalĹ, meaning âa large great fishâ or âa large whaleâ or even âa large sea monster/sea serpent.â Since in Greek mythology the word
kÄtos is closely associated with sea monsters (e.g., Cetus of Greek mythology), early Christians depicted the âfishâ as being a hideous serpentine creature. Jerome later translated this phrase as
piscis granda (great fish) in his Latin Vulgate. He translated
kÄtos, however, as
cetus in Matthew 12:40. At some point, however,
cetus became synonymous with âwhaleâ (for instance, the study of whales is now called cetology), which is the source of the popular idea that it was a whale that swallowed Jonah.
So the âgreat fishâ could have been something else; heck, the
dag gadol of Jonah might have been a one-time special creation or even a species yet unidentified.
The Red Sea didnât part. The Reed Sea did; there is something that has to do with tides that make the water rise or fall very quickly. Moses, spending 40 years in the area and being a fantastic military leader, would have known this to occur and their crossing to the tides.
Ah, the
Yam Suph. Rashi in the 11th century already noted that the word
Yam Suph may mean âReed Seaâ, so itâs nothing new â even so, it has also been suggested that
suph may be related to the Hebrew
suphah (âstormâ) or
soph (âendâ), referring to the events surrounding the escape itself.
Personally though, it wouldnât really make a difference (at least for me) whether the Israelites crossed the âRed Seaâ (
Erythra Thalassa) proper or a more shallow body of water located near it. However, 1 Kings 9:26 seems to indicate that the Red Sea port of Aqaba is located on
Yam Suph:
And King Solomon also built a fleet of ships at Ezion-geber, which is near Elat on the shore of
Yam Suph, in the land of Edom.
The Hebrews therefore seem to have understood the âRed Seaâ to have been contiguous from the Gulf of Suez to the Gulf of Aqaba.